AI Article Synopsis

  • Scientists need to understand how germs (pathogens) from the environment change and grow, especially because of climate change.
  • Researchers studied how certain bacteria and their viruses (phages) affected the spread of a specific type of bacteria that caused problems in the Atlantic Ocean.
  • They found that when these viruses were lost, the bacteria changed quickly, suggesting that these viruses might help germs adapt and evolve in nature.

Article Abstract

An understanding of the processes that contribute to the emergence of pathogens from environmental reservoirs is critical as changing climate precipitates pathogen evolution and population expansion. Phylogeographic analysis of hosts combined with the analysis of their phage resolved ambiguities of diversification dynamics which preceded successful Atlantic invasion by the epidemiologically predominant ST36 lineage. It has been established experimentally that filamentous phage can limit host recombination, but here, we show that phage loss is linked to rapid bacterial host diversification during epidemic spread in natural ecosystems alluding to a potential role for ubiquitous inoviruses in the adaptability of pathogens. This work paves the way for functional analyses to define the contribution of inoviruses in the evolutionary dynamics of environmentally transmitted pathogens.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10790759PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.02851-23DOI Listing

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